Affiliation:
1. From the Departments of Clinical Pharmacology, Emergency Medicine, Haematology and Haemostaseology, and Pharmacology, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
Abstract
Abstract
Inflammatory and procoagulant host responses are closely related in sepsis. The protein C pathway serves as a regulatory pathway with anti-inflammatory and anticoagulant properties. Recently, recombinant human activated protein C (rhAPC) was shown to reduce mortality in severe sepsis. Nevertheless, the effects of rhAPC in humans are still ill defined. The infusion of low endotoxin doses into humans provides a standardized model to study inflammatory and hemostatic mechanisms. Thus, we investigated whether rhAPC acts as an anticoagulant or anti-inflammatory drug in human endotoxemia. There were 24 volunteers randomized to receive either 24 μg/kg per hour rhAPC or placebo intravenously for 8 hours. Lipopolysaccharide (LPS, 2 ng/kg) was administered 2 hours after starting the infusions. rhAPC decreased basal tissue factor (TF)–mRNA expression, and thrombin formation and action. In contrast, rhAPC did not significantly blunt LPS-induced thrombin generation. Consistently, rhAPC did not reduce LPS-induced levels of TF-mRNA or D-dimer and had no effect on fibrinolytic activity or inflammation. Finally, endogenous APC formation was enhanced during endotoxemia and appeared to be associated with inflammation rather than thrombin formation. In conclusion, even low-grade endotoxemia induces significant protein C activation. Infusion of rhAPC decreases “spontaneous” activation of coagulation but does not blunt LPS-induced, TF-mediated coagulation in healthy volunteers, which is in contrast to a number of anticoagulants.
Publisher
American Society of Hematology
Subject
Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry
Cited by
115 articles.
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